Human – Tiger conflict: Cause, Consequence and Mitigation

This tiger had killed a goat outside the park in Talda Khet village causing the villagers to poison the kill. Killing of livestock usually causes conflict.

Dr. K Ullas Karanth, Senior Scientist, Wildlife Conservation Society, and Dr. Rajesh Gopal, Member Secretary of the National Tiger Conservation Authority (NTCA) explain how conflict between humans and tigers can be reduced.

Wherever wild tiger populations survive and come into contact with landscapes dominated by humans, they pose a threat by preying on livestock, and, less commonly, on people. In most parts of India, people are remarkably tolerant of wildlife damage compared with elsewhere in the world, but sometimes, in conflict situations, local antagonism against tigers often erupts into a serious problem.

Among the many conflict-mitigation tactics available to managers – ranging from lethal control to strict preservation – which ones are the most relevant to resolving conflicts?

The present distribution of tigers in India consists of some isolated meta-populations, embedded within larger landscapes that are made up of protected reserves, multiple-use forests, and agricultural and urban areas. The protected reserves are essentially ‘sources’ for dispersing tigers that may survive for brief periods in the surrounding areas, before perishing from poaching or prey depletion. Conflict with humans is largely restricted to the edges of protected reserves, and some multiple-use forests or plantations.

The extent of area of the conflict is, thus, relatively small which makes this a localized management problem. However, by its very nature, the conflict poses a serious dilemma for conservationists trying to promote human–tiger coexistence.

What causes conflict?

Killing of livestock

Tigers readily kill domestic ungulates. Most such predation takes place inside government-owned forests or common pasturelands, where large numbers of livestock graze. Usually livestock kills are not fully consumed by tigers, because herders intervene. In most multiple-use forests, densities of wild prey are low because of hunting and competition with livestock. In such situations tigers may take as much as 12 % of the livestock herds annually.

Accidental killing of humans

In most places, tigers are wary of human beings and avoid encounters. Accidental mauling or killing of humans by tigers is rare, and usually occurs when angry mobs surround tigers that enter human settlements to take livestock. Very rarely, tigers may maul or kill humans they unexpectedly encounter, and the tiger may sometimes eat a part of the corpse. However, such encounters do not lead to persistent attacks on humans—many incidents may require no further management intervention than compensating the victim’s relatives.

Man-eating behaviour

Although extremely rare, it has been historically documented in parts of India that individual tigers begin to view human beings as a ‘prey species’ and persistently stalk them. The ecological and social factors that lead to man-eating are not scientifically proven, but appear to be influenced by distinct factors. Man-eating behaviour is exhibited in an unusually persistent form among the tigers of the Sundarban delta.

Easing the conflict

Legal issues

Wildlife management in India is carried out under the Wildlife Protection Act of 1972, which is strongly preservationist in its thrust. The Act makes it virtually illegal to kill or capture wild animals even when problem animals are involved in severe conflict situations. Only government officials or agents authorized by the Chief Wildlife Warden can authorize such killings or captures. In the case of endangered species like tigers, the necessary authorizations can only be issued by the Director-General of Wildlife Preservation in Delhi, based on an application made by the state Chief Wildlife Warden. While admirable in their intent, these strict legal provisions make it very difficult for local wildlife managers to deal effectively with urgent, life-threatening situations of human–tiger conflict.

Lethal control

Killing of ‘problem’ tigers – through shooting, poisoning of livestock kills and, less commonly, using techniques such as electrocution, snaring and trapping – has been widely accepted and practised by local people in India. In situations involving tigers cornered by uncontrollable mobs (with the imminent prospect of human deaths), or with injured tigers, lethal control is the only practical option. However, urban advocacy groups often oppose such tiger killings. Furthermore, in a free-ranging population, it is very difficult to specifically target the individual problem tiger—several tigers may have to be killed before the problem animal gets eliminated. In such situations, local wildlife managers are often unfairly criticized, based on the unrealistic expectation that only the ‘guilty’ tiger should have been punished. While lethal control is abhorrent to some conservationists, unfortunately it is the only practical option open to wildlife managers in many actual cases of human–tiger conflict.

Capture and removal of ‘problem tigers’

Sometimes managers attempt to capture a ‘problem tiger’ and move it away from the spot of the conflict because this approach has wider social acceptability. However, such translocations are rarely practical, and may not have satisfactory conservation outcomes:

In a free-ranging tiger population it is rarely possible to identify the individual problem animal for removal, unless it enters human settlements or is injured.

Furthermore, safe chemical capture (or driving away) of tigers is usually rendered difficult because of crowd-control problems, injuries to the animal, lack of technical skills, scarcity of resources and other logistical problems.

Even after safe capture, the problem tiger has to be permanently housed in captivity or relocated into the source population from which it came or into a new habitat.

Wild tigers do not adapt well to life in captivity, and the capacity of Indian zoos to hold tigers is already saturated. Most zoos simply cannot afford to house an ever-increasing number of problem tigers.

Most problem tigers that undergo capture and handling are injured in the process, particularly by losing their canine teeth in steel transport cages that are commonly used. Many are either old or weak animals evicted from their ranges by more vigorous rivals. Such tigers are unfit for relocation into the wild.

There are several ecological arguments against translocation of even healthy problem tigers into new habitats.

First, most such relocations simply result in transfer of the problem to a new location leading to a new situation of conflict, because high-quality tiger habitats devoid of conflict potential are scarce.

Second, even after translocation into a large reserve with an adequate prey base, the introduced animal will compete for space and prey with other individuals in the local tiger population. Because tigers are territorial animals, competition is likely to lead to elimination of either the introduced tiger or of another individual from the local population.

Guarding, barriers and aversive conditioning

A reasonably effective traditional approach involves employing human herders to guard livestock grazing in tiger habitats, wherever such labour is available and inexpensive. Since most tiger attacks on livestock and humans occur under free-ranging conditions, mechanical barriers like stockades have limited utility.

In the Sundarban, some measures have been implemented—barriers made of wooden poles, wire mesh and nylon netting are being used to prevent tigers from entering villages; and aversive conditioning of tigers using electrified ‘human dummies’ has been tried out. Success has been claimed for these interesting innovations developed by local wildlife managers, however, there has been no experiment to test their efficacy.

Advanced – and expensive – non-lethal aversive conditioning techniques occasionally used for deterring carnivore attacks in developed countries do not appear to be very relevant to the technology and resource-scarce social context in which most human–tiger conflict occurs in India.

Compensatory payments

In cases of human predation by tigers, financial aid can never fully compensate the loss suffered by the victim’s families. However, prompt delivery of such assistance may help mitigate local hostility towards tigers to some extent. Given the relative rarity of tiger attacks on humans (except in the Sundarban) and the public pressures that such attacks generate, government schemes for compensating for human lives lost to tigers seem to be working reasonably well.

However, payment of compensation for livestock predation – particularly in multiple-use forests with grazing rights – is problematic. Livestock compensation schemes fail for a variety of reasons:

The massive scale of the problem

The low value of livestock in relation to the expenses involved in getting claims verified

Corruption in the official machinery and among claimants

A general lack of rural financial mechanisms enabling quick transactions

Although compensation schemes of the government (and occasionally non government agencies) have long existed over most parts of India, they do not appear to be highly effective. Furthermore, no systematic evaluation of these schemes appears to have been undertaken during the last 30 years.

Relocation of human settlements

Relocation of human settlements is a proactive strategy that tries to alter the ecological setting, and thus prevent conflict. This strategy has been implemented under the Indian government’s wildlife conservation schemes since the early 1970s. For most tiger populations in India survival prospects are bleak in the face of escalating habitat fragmentation and resulting conflict with human interests. As a tool for promoting long-term human–tiger coexistence at the landscape level beyond reserve boundaries, the relocation strategy has several important advantages.

It arrests ongoing conflicts and prevents their escalation.

It has been a critical tool in reducing habitat fragmentation and in driving the recovery of many wild tiger populations from the brink of extirpation in several Indian reserves.

When long-term social and economic costs of dealing with perennial human–tiger conflict are considered, relocation appears to be an attractive preventive option.

However, despite their ecological desirability and cost-effectiveness, resettlement projects face many practical hurdles. If the relocation process is not transparent, incentive-driven and fair, it can lead to hardship and resentments.

Relocation schemes are not very relevant for dealing with conflicts that occur at the hard edge between strictly protected tiger reserves and the extensive agricultural landscapes outside. It is of primary relevance, however, for enclaves of human settlements within important tiger habitats, or critical corridors that connect insular tiger populations. Fortunately, in many such situations, there seems to be an incipient local demand for relocations, driven by changing social traditions and economic aspirations of the local people.

The future of co-existence

Wildlife managers are severely handicapped by stringent legal requirements, lack of financial resources and technical skills, as well as by social pressures generated locally in conflict situations. A clear policy framework would enable them to avoid ad hoc responses and deal with conflict situations much more logically and effectively. Such a policy framework should:

Prioritize the need to keep tigers separate from incompatible human land uses at the scale of protected reserves

The option favoured by social advocacy groups in India – of ‘sustainable’ human use of all tiger habitats – or, the ‘don’t kill a single tiger’ approach favoured by some votaries of animal rights, do not seem viable alternatives.

Co-authored by Dr. Rajesh Gopal who is member secretary of the National Tiger Conservation Authority (NTCA).

Original article: An ecology-based policy framework for human–tiger coexistence in India (K. Ullas Karanth and Rajesh Gopal) in the book ‘People and Wildlife: Conflict or Coexistence?’ eds. Rosie Woodroffe, Simon Thirgood and Alan Rabinowitz, published by Cambridge University Press in 2005.

Comments

Older Comments

Dear sir,
Recently I was in Masinagudi , I wonder how people rear livestock inside Masinagudi tiger reserve.
How can they mutually co-exist .
Are they not made aware by the forest department there.
Old and weak tigers will always aim for soft targets.
How beautiful it was in the ‘Truth about tigers’.
Even the “Man eaters of Kumaon” by Jim Corbett will reveal a lot for the younger generations .
Every animal has a right to live but we term them as Man eaters , Cattle eaters etc.
People have to understand that its we humans who eat their space.And Its we human who give rights to every animal to live without understanding that a right is always a privilege.
It need not be given..
Let there be a Universal declaration of wildlife rights soon by all your efforts.
Its a pleasure to have an oppurtunity to comment on your article sir.

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